| Fall
1996
by Tom Condon
When Samuel Colt, the gunmaker, returned
to his native city in 1847, Hartford had little manufacturing.
When he died at forty-seven, in 1862, the city was becoming
a world leader, largely because of Colt's inventions, innovations,
and spin-offs. As his six-gun tamed the West, his precision
metalworking techniques helped turn the Connecticut Valley
into the Silicon Valley of its day. One company started by
ex-Colt machinists Francis Pratt and Amos Whitney evolved
into United Technologies, Inc., the giant jet-engine maker.
Colt and his wife Elizabeth left their mark
on the landscape. They donated a park, a church, and a wing
of the Wadsworth Atheneum, the city's historic art museum.
Colt also left his armory complex, a sprawling "factory
village" of houses, parks, and factories built where
he diked the Connecticut River. The centerpiece of the complex
is the East Armory building, a ponderous red-brick structure
on which Colt placed a large, Russian-style blue onion dome,
to get the attention of steamboat passengers on the Connecticut
River.
Today, drivers on I-91 glance up at the
blue-domed factory, and it looks embarrassingly shabby, like
a giant old piece of furniture left by the road. Two years
ago, Colt's Manufacturing Co. consolidated its gun-making
in a modern plant in West Hartford, leaving about half of
the three-quarter-million-square-foot complex empty. Old New
England factories often don't survive a lengthy vacancy.
The best hope is that the Colt Building,
as it is known, will save itself. As space in the complex
became available in the early 1980s, young artists and photographers
moved in, attracted by the high ceilings and low rents. They
both lived and worked in their studios. It wasn't exactly
legal then, but now it is, and it's going great guns. All
eighty-two lofts are full, and there's a waiting list. Another
eighty artists and small business owners -- printers, design
firms, recording studios -- have moved into day space. Many
meet for breakfast each morning in the second-floor Blue Onion
Cafe.
Still, experts say it will take a major
tenant to make the building work. There's been some talk of
a Colt museum. Now on exhibit at the Wadsworth Atheneum is
a show entitled, "Sam and Elizabeth Colt: The Legend
and Legacy of Colt's Empire." It is the largest showing
ever of art, memorabilia, and firearms from the Wadsworth's
Colt Collection and from others around the country. When the
exhibit ends next year, it could be moved to the Colt Building
as a permanent museum, if space and funds can be readied.
If not, another big tenant must appear.
The man who diked the Connecticut River
to build his armory would think of something; he would find
an opportunity anywhere. When willow trees grew on his dike,
he brought in German craftsmen to make willow furniture. The
German-style houses he built for them still stand. His building,
and his city, need a little of this spirit.
Tom Condon writes for the Hartford Courant. |